eMusic Review 0
One of the crucial nodes in Krautrock's sprawling history, Harmonia was a collaboration between Michael Rother (one-half of motorik rockers Neu! and an early member of Kraftwerk) and Cluster's Hans Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius. They were less a band, per se, than a point of intersection for various ideas about rhythm, texture and technology that were floating around the West German experimental rock scene of the '70s. That intersection turned international when, in 1976, Brian Eno — often said to have called them the world's most important rock band — plugged in with the group in their studio in rural Forst, near Düsseldorf. It was clearly a fruitful encounter: Eno would continue to collaborate with Roedelius and Moebius (along with Asmus Tietchens and Can's Holger Czukay) for 1977's Cluster & Eno and the following year's After the Heat. But the Harmonia sessions would go unreleased for another two decades.
Adding three tracks not included on the 1997 Rykodisc reissue, the remastered 2009 edition of Tracks and Traces isn't just for Krautrock completists. Downplaying Neu!'s pulse and Can's tribal funk, the group stretches out and sinks into a mossy bed of lilting synthesizers, tapeworn effects and muted electric guitars and… read more »